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Chapter 2 of Mark Pilgrim's book. This one is interesting in that it is both a discussion on how you might, as a web developer, use JavaScript to detect your customer's browser support for the new HTML5 features, as well as, at the same time, using these/
A site which tests and reports your browser's support for new and forthcoming Html5, Css3 and JavaScript APIs and presenting the results in a simple grid. Where a feature is missing, haz.io links to a fallback resource.
A JavaScript library (released under MIT license) that you can add to your HTML documents in order to test that your (or rather your end-user's) browser supports the new HTML5 and CSS3 elements and features. Simply tests the features on page load and crea
A JavaScript library that helps web developers to test for the new features provided by Html5, Css3 and the new browser APIs with a view to providing fallbacks where features are not supported.
Mentioned on The Guardian Tech Weekly Podcast 22/11/2011.
in list: eg-353-research-tools
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Google Chrome Portable is a web browser that runs web pages and applications with lightning speed. It's designed to be simple and stylish. It's packaged as a portable app, so you can take your browsing experience with you.
PortableApps.com - Portable software for USB drives. Recommended for EG-353 Research Project students by Dr Chris P. Jobling. Make sure that you always have a decent web browser!
in list: eg-353-research-tools
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Mozilla Firefox®, Portable Edition is the popular Mozilla Firefox web browser bundled with a PortableApps.com Launcher as a portable app, so you can take your bookmarks, extensions and saved passwords with you.
The open-source browser that, with the help of extensions, can be extended to become a valuable part of your research arsenal.
in list: eg-353-research-tools
Interesting site to be used as part of introductions to HTML5
A new HTML5 showcase from Google - aimed at the promotion of the Chrome Browser but useful nonetheless!
Brad Neuberg from Google Developer Programs gives an introduction to HTML 5 to the developers at Yahoo!
"Ben Galbraith and Dion Almaer present the current status of the browser as a platform and what it takes to be successful: a very fast JavaScript engine, using Canvas or no more drawing plug-ins, thread support, transforming it into a desktop, taking over
InfoQ article analyzing the technical aspects of Google Chrome.
Comic book presentation of the ideas behind Chrome, Google's new open source browser.
For seven years, the DOCTYPE switch has stood designers [as acted as a] a toggle between standards mode and quirks mode. When IE7 [...] broke the web, it revealed the flaw in our toggle. Is version targeting the answer? Aaron Gustafson "A List Apart".
"I'd like to live in a world [...] where version targetting wasn't needed. Designing with web standards ought to be enough, and anyone who works on websites should know how to do it." Discusses version targetting in IE8. Jeffry Zeldman at "A List Apart".
Presented by the Silicon Valley WebBuilder, this event brought together Mike Shaver from Mozilla, Chris Wilson from Microsoft's IE team, Håkon Lie from Opera, and moderator Douglas Crockford from Yahoo! to talk about the current state of the browser land
Deja Vu - the web as we remember it. A place to try your website designs on emulators of older generation web browsers
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